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November 01, 2004 |

IP Blog Roundup

With their immediacy and focus, blogs are becoming de rigueur in legal circles. And that's more the case for intellectual property than it is for any other practice area. Dozens of blogs now track developments in patent, trademark and copyright law. Written by practicing lawyers, full-time academics and even non-lawyers, they discuss events virtually as they happen, often adding unique perspective and analysis. Here is a survey of selected IP blogs.
6 minute read
April 19, 2010 |

CIVIL ACTIONS

The following cases were recently filed in the Washington-area district courts. This information is provided by the courts' online bulletins.
3 minute read
March 19, 2003 |

5 minute read
February 20, 2006 |

Movers

DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary: Frank Menaker comes on board as partner in the firm's Washington office- and other notable personnel moves.
4 minute read
August 22, 2003 |

Federal Circuit Hands Palm a Patent Setback

The Federal Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals on Wednesday reinstated a patent infringement suit against Palm Inc. involving the company's Palm handheld devices. E-Pass Technologies Inc. filed suit against 3Com Corp. and Palm Inc. claiming the companies infringed its patent on a method to substitute multiple credit cards with a single electronic card. Despite this setback for Palm, patent lawyers say E-Pass will have a difficult time arguing that its patent covers Palm's handheld organizers.
3 minute read
April 13, 2007 |

Stranger Than Fiction

The practice of patenting genes has suddenly attracted a swarm of critics. The blitz includes an op-ed article in The New York Times by best-selling-novelist-turned-patent-gadfly Michael Crichton, a torrent of posts and comments on patent law blogs, and a disturbingly sweeping piece of intellectual property legislation. Ironically, gene patents were already losing their glow as a biotech IP panacea.
3 minute read
January 13, 2012 |

Federal Circuit upholds preliminary injunction in case over frozen liver cells

A recent split decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit illustrates the divisions in the court over the standards for preliminary injunctions as well as for patent invalidity based on obviousness.On Jan. 9, the majority in Celsis In Vitro Inc. v. CellzDirect Inc. affirmed a preliminary injunction for Celsis against CellzDirect and Invitrogen Corp.
5 minute read
February 03, 2003 |

Verdicts and Settlements

On Dec. 19, 2002, a Dallas jury awarded Grand Prairie-based Poly-America, which manufacturers liners used to prevent wastewater contamination in landfills, more than $12.2 million in damages in a patent infringement case. And a Tarrant County jury awarded damages in excess of $6 million against Toshiba Machine Co. of America.
3 minute read
June 16, 2010 |

Sanofi, Albany Molecular Win Preliminary Injunction Blocking Generic Version of Allegra

At-risk generic drug launches?in which a generic drug manufacturer launches its version of a brand-name drug without a finding that the brand manufacturer's patent is invalid or not infringed?are a rare event. Following Monday's ruling by a federal judge, Dr. Reddy's Laboratories probably understands why.
2 minute read
August 05, 2008 |

New Light on the BlackBerry Litigation

Recently released Patent and Trademark Office e-mails acquired by NTP, Inc. -- the patent-holding company that nearly shut down BlackBerry service in the U.S. before reaching a $612.5 million settlement with Research in Motion -- show meddling by RIM and raise questions about the PTO, NTP lawyers say.
8 minute read

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